The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Unlicensed gold dealer to get revised sentence

- Chief Court Reporter

THE High Court has quashed a five-year sentence imposed on a man convicted of possession of 0,229 grammes of gold without a licence and ordered the trial magistrate to review the penalty.

The High Court said the magistrate exceeded the sentencing limit of her jurisdicti­on when she applied the minimum laid down sentence.

Praise Ncube will now be sentenced afresh after the court found the sentence was not in accordance with the law.

Ncube was on January 9 last year convicted of possession of 0,229 g of gold at Filabusi magistrate­s’ courts and then slapped with a five-year jail term.

When the matter was brought before Bulawayo High Court on review, Justice Christophe­r Dube-Banda upheld the conviction but quashed the sentence.

“Nothing turns on the conviction as it is in accordance with real and substantia­l justice,” he said.

“It is the sentence that is irregular and not in accordance with the law.”

Ncube appeared before a magistrate whose sentencing jurisdicti­on in terms of the Magistrate Court Act, is two years’ imprisonme­nt or a fine up to level seven.

However, on remittal by the Prosecutor General, she can impose a sentence of four years or a fine up to level nine.

Noting that the magistrate sentenced the accused to a five-year prison term, Justice Dube-Banda queried whether the magistrate had the jurisdicti­on to impose a sentence of five years in the present case.

According to the magistrate, she has special jurisdicti­on by virtue of the Gold Trade Act that provides for a mandatory minimum sentence.

But Justice Dube-Banda ruled that neither in the Magistrate­s Court Act nor the Gold Trade Act is an ordinary magistrate given special or increased sentencing jurisdicti­on in relation to contraveni­ng of the Act, finding that there are other statutory enactments that give ordinary magistrate­s special sentencing jurisdicti­on, but the Gold Trade Act was not one of them.

“The fact that section 3(3) of the Act prescribes a minimum mandatory sentence of five years does not automatica­lly give an ordinary magistrate sentencing jurisdicti­on that she does not possess,” said the judge.

“Her sentencing jurisdicti­on can only be increased or extended by legislatio­n. It is so because the magistrate­s court is a creature of statute and therefore special or increased sentencing jurisdicti­on is given by the legislatur­e.”

So, the sentence imposed on Ncube could not stand because it is not in accordance with real and substantia­l justice as required by the law.

The trial magistrate should have stopped the matter in terms of the provisions of the Magistrate­s Court Act and sought the directions of the Prosecutor General in terms of the provisions of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act rather than assume jurisdicti­on that she did not have.

Accordingl­y, the judge confirmed the conviction and set aside the sentence and referred the matter back to the magistrate to revise the sentence.

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